1. Cut the stems of your flowers at a 45-degree angle one inch from the bottom.

Kathleen Kamphausen

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This instantly increases the surface area for water intake, so your flowers will be well hydrated.

2. Use a teacup as a vase.

Kathleen Kamphausen

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Don't trash flowers with shorter stems. Instead display them in a teacup. Keep the stems together using a clear hair tie, like Goody Ouchless Mini Elastics, so they don't separate in the teacup, which also makes it easier to change the water. Pictured here: pink ranunculus, lavender, and wildflowers celosia and muscari.

3. Open closed buds quickly by putting them in warm water first, then cold water.

Kathleen Kamphausen

After cutting flower stems as described in No. 1, put flowers in a glass filled with warm water. After a minute, move flowers to a vase filled with cold water and leave them for 20 minutes. Flowers will open up to their maximum size. Pictured here: pink peonies.

Before putting your flowers in a vase, add several drops of vodka and a teaspoon of white sugar, which delays wilting. When your flowers eventually do start to die (sad face), add a shot of vodka into the water and the stems will stand up straight again for a day or two. Pictured here: tulip orange princess flowers.

5. Display succulents in pretty dessert bowls.

Kathleen Kamphausen

Dessert bowls make chic pots for a succulent! Simply fill to the brim with potting soil, which you can find at Home Depot, spritz the soil with tap water to moisten it, and then nestle the succulent into the top layer of the soil. Over time, it will begin to grow roots. Just be sure to spray them once a week with the spray bottle until the top of the soil looks wet.

6. Water your orchid with an ice cube, since it's the perfect amount of hydration.

Kathleen Kamphausen

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First, repot your orchid into a vase using potting soil, if it isn't already in a vase, and then water the orchid with one ice cube a week. For larger orchids, use two ice cubes a week. The ice cube melts slowly and gives the orchid a slow drip of hydration, so that it doesn't drown it.

7. Create a grid with transparent tape to keep your flowers in place when using a shallow vase.

Kathleen Kamphausen

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To keep short flowers from falling out of shallow vases, make a grid with clear water-resistant floral tape (or thin transparent Scotch tape) to hold flowers in place.

Kathleen Kamphausen

Insert fuller flowers first at an angle since they'll take up most of the vase/bowl. Next, use medium-size flowers to fill in the remaining holes in the arrangement, and then use the smallest florals as your accent flowers to finish the design. Pictured here: blue hydrangea, purple lisianthus, scabiosa pods, lavender, and celosia.

Kathleen Kamphausen

8. Stack a vase within a vase in order to layer fruit slices along the inside.

Kathleen Kamphausen

Find a vase that fits inside another vase with half an inch of room between them. Fill the space between the two vases up most of the way with water before slipping in sliced lemons (the arrangement pictured required nine lemons). Pop your accent flowers (pictured are a dozen sunflowers) in the center vase, and voil!

Kathleen Kamphausen

9. Dry flowers by hanging them upside down in a cool space.

Kathleen Kamphausen

Whether it's a flower crown of a bouquet that you want to save, the best way to dry flowers is by tying the ends of the stems with a ribbon and hanging them from a nail, the corner of a picture frame, or a key rack, where they'll serve as decoration. Pictured here: a flower crown from Crowns by Christy.

10. Drop a penny in your vase to keep your flower water fresh longer.

Kathleen Kamphausen

The copper in pennies works as an acidifier, which helps prevent fungus or bacteria from growing. Note: Marshall suggests looking for pennies minted before 1982, since they contain more copper and will keep your arrangement look amazing a couple of days longer. Pictured here: scabiosa pods and scabiosa flowers.

11. If your house is decorated in neutral colors, try decorating with darker flowers.

Kathleen Kamphausen

To create an arrangement that transcends gender, try darker flowers, like the black calla lilies, thistle, scabiosa pods, viburnum berries that were used here. They'll look lovely in a pretty birch-covered vase.

12. Twist off the head of a rose to easily access its petals.

Kathleen Kamphausen

The best way to de-petal a rose without bruising or ripping them is to hold the stem still and gently twist the rose head away from you.

For a fabulous bath, place the petals in a tub filled with warm water and rose bath oil (try this one from Jo Malone), which is naturally hydrating and will make your skin feel extra-soft. The gorgeous flowers will instantly lighten your mood!

Kathleen Kamphausen

13. Organize a rainbow arrangement easily by choosing your flowers first, laying them out in the order you want them to appear, and then building a bouquet from there.

Kathleen Kamphausen

The trick to creating a rainbow arrangement is first laying out all the flowers by color, cutting the stems at an angle, and then placing each stem in your vase at an angle. You want to make sure you insert the larger flowers first to lay the foundation of the arrangement, followed by the medium-size flowers, and finishing with the smaller blooms. And, you're done! Pictured here in order from left to right: black calla lilies, purple lisianthus, blue thistle, blue hydrangea, green trick dianthus, scabiosa pods, sunflower, yellow ranunculus, orange roses, orange tulips, red celosia, hot pink roses, pink ranunculus, light pink peony.

14. Make a rose twist bouquet by stacking each stem over one another.

Kathleen Kamphausen

To create a rose twist bouquet with pretty crisscrossing stems, start by inserting your first stem into the vase, and then place the next stem across it and continue crossing each new stem over the last one until the glass is full.

Kathleen Kamphausen

15. Dress up a plain glass vase with twine, ribbon, or lace to give it some character.

Kathleen Kamphausen

Here, Marshall used twine to doll up this otherwise plain glass vase, tying it in an "X" formation and twisting it in the back.